2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.matpr.2019.06.361
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Rheological and Filtration Performances of Rhizophora mucronata Tannin Water-Based Drilling Fluid

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Cited by 11 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Reference [65] studied the rheological and filtration properties of WBDF when Rhizophora mucronata tannin was used as a deflocculant. At a maximum post-ageing temperature of 177˚C, the formulated mud-rheological properties such as plastic viscosity, yield point, 10 sec gel strength and 10 min gel strength tend to decrease significantly by 28.2 percent, 33.3 percent, 33.3 percent and 27.3 percent, respectively.…”
Section: Unmodified Tannin-based Deflocculantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reference [65] studied the rheological and filtration properties of WBDF when Rhizophora mucronata tannin was used as a deflocculant. At a maximum post-ageing temperature of 177˚C, the formulated mud-rheological properties such as plastic viscosity, yield point, 10 sec gel strength and 10 min gel strength tend to decrease significantly by 28.2 percent, 33.3 percent, 33.3 percent and 27.3 percent, respectively.…”
Section: Unmodified Tannin-based Deflocculantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Currently in the field of drilling fluids, widely used environmentally friendly additives mainly indicate natural materials, such as lignin, tannin, starch, cellulose, and their derivatives. Lignin sulfonate (Pourmahdi et al, 2023;Su et al, 2022), tannin (Muhayyidin et al, 2018;Pérez and Colina, 2015) have a certain adsorption properties on clay, and they usually manifest viscosity reduction and filtration loss properties. Modified starch (Dias et al, 2015), polyanionic cellulose (Jia et al, 2022), β-cyclodextrin polymer microsphere (Zhong et al, 2020), and others can improve the viscosity and decrease the fluid loss.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over time, drilling industry has shifted from using commercial polymers to agromaterials containing cellulose as filtrate loss control agents in drilling fluids. Some of the literature reported additives include but not limited to agarwood waste, rice husk, dates, grass powder, shell powder, wood powder, pistachio shell powder, mandarin peels powder, fibrous food waste material, palm tree leaves powder, green olive pits' powder, groundnut husk, psyllium husk, and date pits (Azizi et al 2013;Okon et al 2014;Dagde and Nmegbu 2014;Salmachi et al 2016;Hossain and Wajheeuddin 2016;Davoodi et al 2018;Haider et al 2019;Aggrey et al 2019;Muhayyidin et al 2019;Al-Hameedi et al 2020). Azizi et al (2013) evaluated the efficacy of agarwood waste as a filtrate control material and compared it with a formulation containing a regular fluid loss control agent (starch).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A locally sourced date seed powder was used as a filtrate control agent that proved its applicability as a filtrate control additive for both fresh that salt water-based muds (Amanullah et al 2016). Muhayyidin et al (2019) investigated the rheological and filtration parameters of a water-based mud containing Rhizophora Mucronate tannin as a deflocculant and fluid loss additive under high pressure and high temperature (HPHT) conditions. It was discovered that it can be utilized to control filtrate loss in both LPLT and HPHT conditions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%